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labview1958
Nov6-09, 02:37 AM
The bulb connected to the input of a step-up transformer is less bright than a similiar bulb connected to its output. Why?

vk6kro
Nov6-09, 08:30 AM
Because there is more voltage at the output of a step-up transformer than at the input.

Lamp brightness depends on supply voltage. It gets brighter as the voltage increases.

funops
Dec7-09, 07:47 PM
I have a question regarding bulb brightness but it is not particularly scientific as it is fictional for a humorous short story I'm writing. The main character is fooling around with electricity when I huge power surge spike runs into his lab wiring. Would that explode the light bulbs or is there some kind of bulb, industrial strength, whatever, that could withstand a gigantic power surge spike and getting blinding bright for a second or so?

Thanx for your help. :)

mabs239
Dec8-09, 12:04 AM
funops,

You better start a new thread.

I have seen a lot of times electronics equipment failiures attributed to high voltage surges by the vendor. I have never heared a bulb or light becoming victim of that surge.

MATLABdude
Dec8-09, 02:50 AM
funops,

You better start a new thread.

I have seen a lot of times electronics equipment failiures attributed to high voltage surges by the vendor. I have never heared a bulb or light becoming victim of that surge.

I've seen 'country-rated' lightbulbs (manufactured by Philips, so I assume it's legit) that indicated they'd withstand the surges and sags seen after kilometers of transmission lines. However as a city-slicker, I have no idea of how serious of an issue this actually is.